Long range misses

... and not proving the rifle set up before you need to use it. Personally, I would say that accounts for probably 50% of the missed out there for long range hunting, ...

I'm pretty careful about this yet this has caused me two flubs in the past 4 years. Both times the rifle was bumped enough to move the POI. I like to shoot the rifle just prior to entering the field to confirm POI. In spite of this I still got bit in the butt. Can't do enough to protect the rifle/scope setup from bumps and jars after the last confirmation shooting.
 
Yah right.:) If what you've been doing is getting closer, I'd hate to see the deer when you finally get it right.

Seems to me like I remember a few threads/posts about you and that old worn out 7mm AM thumping a few deer in the last couple of years.:)

Well Dick, everybody gets lucky now and then, Having an old 7mm AM don't hurt either.
RR
 
Seems like an entertaining question. I'll offer a few of mine. Seems like I've missed for about every concievable reason. Educational, frustrating, embarrasing, and humorous...

First one comes to mind was a buck at 1269 yards. I shot two MOA over his back. It simply didn't dawn on me the wind blowing up that twenty + degree slope for 2/3 of a mile would lift the bullet. Call it a brain failure.

I've missed because I didn't dial for the range at all.
I've missed because I dialed my windage the wrong direction.

I have believed the first range my rangefinder gave.

I've used the wrong drop data.

I've forgotten to rezero after a long shot, I've lost my place and been off a revolution.

I have pulled a shot or two. What can you say at the time? That one broke a minute right. Doh!

I put a 243 shell in a 270. Shockingly, I didn't hit the 900 yard target.

Misread the wind.... three thousand times.

Used the wrong hold over.

I've used my reticle for holdover on the wrong power.

Does it count as a miss if you forget to take the safety off?

How about if you hit the trigger with a gloved finger and fire a round before you're even on target?


Truth is, very few of these happened in hunting situations. But, they've all happened. For the most part, things come together when it counts.
 
I think it all has to do with Murphys Law (If it can happen, it will happen)

I spent quite a lot of time with him when I was bow hunting and now that Murphy
has taken up long range hunting he's a busy man.

J E CUSTOM
 
I can't believe I'm going to admit this...
We pulled up on an old log landing right at daylight. Two feeding buck less than a hundred yards away. Took a couple of shot and before I could get the cork back in the bottle, the bucks fed out of sight.
 
I shoot a 6 point whitetail buck in the Andes mountains at 350 yards, first shoot completely missed him, then I wondered what went wrong (buck fever!!!), then shot the second time and killed him right there, and when he fell a 10 pointer I have not seen before stood up, and runned straight to me!!! I mean right to me, and when he was like 10 yards away, I stopped him with a mouth made noise, and when I pulled the trigger nothing happened????????????
I forgot to reload after I saw the little buck down!!! So the big boy in two seconds runned out of sight!!!
Thats is just one of the stories.
I guess it happens to all of us!!!:D:D:D
 
This past winter I went coyote hunting and I called a couple in. I shot the first one(also my first coyote) but was so excited when I cycled my bolt I didn't pull it back far enough to eject and load(I just pushed the empty back in the chamber). Needless to say there was a click and no bang on the second one. It got away unscathed.
 
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